Whatever I say about it will not be enough. Just go play it. Find the joy in getting hacked back by turrets, killing video game censors, pretending you're a samurai Rick Deckard and breaking your legs over and over again. Also paranoia, visual and auditory hallucinations and ♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥! Ultra-failed attacks!

Give it a chance. Or 3. Game is impenetrable, but once you make sweet sweet love to it, it will open up like the most beautiful cyberpunk flower. 11/10, fun for the whole family.

I don't get this game. It has very few checkpoints, and breaks often. You hardly ever know what you're doing and just fight your way to the next armory. Get it cheap for 1-2 hours of small fun but I wouldn't recommend it.

But seriously though it doesn't make a lot of sense and is complicated to figure out. Shooting is decent but doesn't feel like anything special. Try it out for yourself if you like, just my personal opinion it's not that great.

Well, E.Y.E is certainly something. It's a shooter with great upsides, and downsides, so only buy this if you feel the good outweighs the bad (i certainly do)

Pros:

-Interesting class system, your class is determined by the skills and augmentations you get, and not vice versa, and doesent really affect anything aside from giving you an aesthetic title - there is no actual limit to the combination of powers/augmentations you can get.

-Good cyberpunk/surreal atmosphere - not many games have that kind of feel

-Massive levels, with multiple paths for completion of each mission, so you can play it the way you want (you don't have to fire a single shot if you don't want to)

-Fast paced gunplay, and action-packed awesomeness (you can jump ont a helicopter, shoot some guys below you, backstab the helicopter and jump off as it falls to its spiralling demise)

-You play as a psychic cyber ninja monk paladin with amnesia who everybody seems to despise for no reason

Cons

-The story is completely and utterly insane, half the time i hve no idea what the hell i'm doing, or why i'm killing who i'm killing

-Death is punished a little too harshly - i mean seriously, permanent stat debuffs? (well, I say permanent, there IS and endgame way to cure them, but as I said, it's endgame)

-Enemies have ridiculous accuracy, though it is quite amusing to suddenly get sniped from accross the map by a bandit with an unscoped SMG

EYE is a game that seems to have been born out of the eldritch realm of Cthulhu during his reign of madness, but if you can see through all its unpolished edges and random shenanigans, you will find a unique game that you will not regret buying. (also, it costs only 10€, so why the hell not?)

EYE: Divine Cybermancy has you fill the boots of a special agent working with a special forces group in a world strife with political backstabbing. That said, I wouldn't consider plot to be the biggest pull to this game. Between the wide variety of weapons, hacking, psionics, stealth, and mechanical augments, the game is a veritable playground, with each mission being able to be completed in a variety of ways: Slowly hacking into the augmented brains of your enemies and turning them into mindless slaves to act as your meat shields to wearing heavy armor and mowing down hordes with a minigun, or even using psychic powers to fling broken cars across the map. Perhaps the most alluring aspect of the game is the power the protagonist can obtain, vaguely reminiscent of Deus EX, you have no conventional classes, and your progressive character building eventually results in an incredibly powerful, flexible--or specialized--protagonist. The main campaign can be played alone, or with friends on LAN, moreover, there's competitive PvP gamemodes to keep things fresh.

The game itself is fairly adequate in length, requiring six to ten hours to complete, but with endings for four complete playthroughs. Moreover, your characters will maintain from one gamemode to another, so if you play multi-player a lot, you can then port your character to the main campaign, or load it in to play with a friend in co-operative missions. As such, the same character can be made to play through the game multiple times, hitting ever high levels of power until you're jumping over apartment buildings and slicing through gunships with a Katana--that's also a demonic cyborg.

If you enjoy things like Warhammer 40k, Ghost in the Shell, or Shadowrun, this is likely the game for you with its dystopian cyberpunk FPS/RPG themes. While the plot, gameplay, and atmosphere holds up for solo play, the game is best done with a group of friends.